Friday, July 19, 2019
Homelessness in Public Schools Essay -- Education
 	  In the United States nationwide public schools are faced with dilemmas. The choices schools make has to be effective, serve the students, and have the best outcome. Well known problems such as bullying, special educational needs, budget cuts, new standards, and job cuts. Some of the problems are well known to the public while other problems are left in the background. According to the National Association for the Education of Homeless Children and Youth (NAEHCY) reported that the U.S. Department of Education collected data stating ââ¬Å"during the 2008-2009 school year that 954,914 homeless children and youth were enrolled in public schools.â⬠  This problem affects the child socially, mentally, and most importantly academically.   	 The National Association for the Education of Homeless Children and Youth (NAEHCY) defines Homelessness ââ¬Å"is a lack of permanent housing resulting from extreme poverty and/or unsafe or unstable living environmentsâ⬠ (NAEHCY, 2011, p. 2). In the year 2004, it was required that all states were to report to CSPR (Consolidated State Performance Report)  of data collected of children and youth enrolled in any educational services (Bowman, Dukes, Moore, 2012, p. 6). The table presented below shows reports the school years of 2004-2010.     Number of Homeless Students Reported by States in the CSPR   2004-2005 	2005-2006 	2006-2007 	2007-2008 	2008-2009 	2009-2010   655,591 	906,680* 	679,724 	794,617 	956,914 	939,903     The National Center on Family Homelessness (NCFH) conducted research and collected data and found during a three year research of CSPR reports. (Bowman. ET al.ââ¬â¢s, 2012).  In the school years 2006-2009 ââ¬Å"41% increase in the number of homeless student enrolled in schools across the nationâ⬠ (Bowman...              ...2). Summary of the state of research: On the relationship between homelessness and academic achievement among school-aged children and youth (ED-04-CO-0056/0002). Retrieved from U.S. Department of Education website: http://www.serve.org/nche    Carter. Samuel, C. (2000). No excuses; lessons from 21 high performing high poverty schools. Washington, DC: The Heritage Foundation.    Murphy.Joseph, F. & Tobin.Kerri, J. (2011, November). Homelessness comes to school. How homeless children and youths can succeed, 93(3), 32-37. Retrieved from http://kappanmagazine.org      National Assocation for the Education of Homeless Children and Youth. (2011). Facts about homeless education. Retrieved from http;//naehcy.org/facts.html     W&B School of Education. (2012). History of the mckinney act. Retrieved from http://education.wm.edu/centers/hope/resources/mckinneyact/index.php                           
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